amprecon said:
I will just have to say that not much regard is given to any individual American citizens' "rights" anymore. If what you do or say is not aligned with public opinion or popular, it won't matter what you think your "rights" are or if you are completely within your "rights", you will be persecuted.
The curtain has dropped, the "rights" we keep bantering about that we supposedly have, has no bearing on the "justice" that will be brought down upon you.
...
This Constitutional Republic we had, no longer exists contrary to the belief's of many Americans, the law now is whatever they want it to be regardless of the previous boundaries that were in place...
Phooey!
Most of the time people object to the way the system is working it seems to be primarily because they aren't getting what they want. But we live in a pluralistic Republic, and not everyone agrees that things ought to be the way you want them to be.
At various times in our history things we today take for granted were illegal. People were permitted to own other humans. You could go to jail for operating your business on a Sunday. You could go to jail for having intimate relations with a person of a different race or the same gender.
Some freedoms important to you might have been less circumscribed in the past than today. But some other freedoms important to others (and perhaps less important to you) were more circumscribed in the past and less so today. That is an ordinary ebb and flow of an organized society.
Throughout our history there have been people who have complained that the actions of the federal government were inimical to the founding principles of our Nation and inconsistent with the proper scope of government. Throughout our history there have been people who have complained that the actions of state governments were inimical to the founding principles of our Nation and inconsistent with the proper scope of government. That sort of friction will be common to any organized society. Our Founders left us with a particular framework and process (a federal system, checks and balances and separation of powers) for managing that friction.
Often those who tend to be the most dissatisfied with the way the process is working are forgetting their own role in the process. We select the government. How effective are you at influencing your neighbors, the people in your community, your co-workers, etc., to join you in selecting representatives who will further the goals and values important to you?
The Founding Fathers set up our system --
- The Constitution of the United States of America. And from the Constitution, we can infer that they intended us to have, among other things:
- A system of checks and balances achieved through a separation of powers among the Congress (legislative), the President (executive) and the Courts (judicial);
- Of these three branches of government, the legislative was most directly subject to the influence of the body politic, and the judicial was the least subject to the direct influence of the body politic;
- Judicial power vested in a Supreme Court and such inferior courts as Congress might establish, and this judicial power would extend to all cases arising under, among other things, the Constitution and the laws of the United States;
- A Constitution that could be changed, albeit with difficulty.
The system does allow for change, so you are free to try to generate sufficient support to put into place an alternate system which might suit you better.